Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

Spain: The world's largest urban vegetable garden is in Madrid

Lettuce, and in the background, a sea of ​​rooftops; on the other side, padron peppers, borage, tomatoes, and in background, the Retiro Park and its greenness. We are talking about the world's largest urban vegetable garden, located on the terrace of Madrid's Hotel Wellington. If you walk through Velázquez street, right next to El Retiro, look up at Wellington's balcony. Maybe from the street you can identify some of the vegetables that have been supplying the hotel's restaurant for a few months.


Photo by idealista.com

The garden comprises no less than 325 m2 and is used to grow chards, different tomato varieties, aubergines, red chard, hot peppers, courgettes, aromatic herbs and even strawberries, which have not yet reached the hotel kitchen, where all of these products are used, because the entire production is consumed through trying them and offering them as a present to employees and visitors.


Photo by idealista.com

The garden, which is not open to the public, although guests can visit it if requested, is operational since March this year; the month when the first lettuce were planted.


Photo by idealista.com

The idea of ​​using the terrace as vegetable garden was proposed by the hotel president, Manuel Moratiel, who after travelling to different cities realised the relevance that urban gardens are gaining in cities. In this case, we cannot say, "said and done", because although the garden was set up in nine days, it took a lot of will and not a little imagination to bring soil and planters up to the terrace of a building whose interior looks like a maze of corridors. 

Floren Domezain, director of the restaurant Raíces, in Zaragoza, knows a lot about the construction and maintenance of this garden. He is the one devoted to taking care of these plants and to ensure that they do not lack anything; not surprisingly, considering that the chef is known for the high quality of his vegetables.


Photo by idealista.com

"It has a drip irrigation system; with 20 litres of water we irrigate the whole garden," says Floren while he shows us the various plots. "We had to bring 1,800 bags of soil, 80 litres each, up here; it was an odyssey." The soil comes from Tudela, because Madrid has the same weather conditions. 

With the same soil, the result is also the same: delicious vegetables that diners can enjoy in the restaurant located a few floors below. "We have not calculated how much is saved by growing vegetables instead of buying them, but it could be done. We have already had several harvests: the lettuce plot has been harvested three times; only in the first one we obtained 700 units. We have also harvested 55 kilos of chard and over 900 units of chive, and all organic."



This garden is the only one of its kind in Madrid, and also the largest in the world: "It offers great advantages; it should be much more common. It purifies the environment and saves on heating because the soil is a great heat insulator," he concludes.


Source: idealista.com
Publication date:

Related Articles → See More